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Serial Shooter Trial ~

Archive for the 'Mesa' Tag

Monday wrap: Witnesses recall death of woman believed to be final victim

December 2nd, 2008, 11:12 am by Nick R. Martin

One man knew her. The other did not. One learned about her death from a TV news reporter. The other held the young woman as she bled.

Both men on Monday told striking and heart-wrenching stories about the death of Robin Blasnek, the Mesa woman believed to be the final victim of the Serial Shooters.

The 22-year-old was killed by a shotgun blast as she walked by herself down a darkened Mesa street on July 30, 2006.

Her death came just days before two people, Dale Hausner and Samuel Dieteman, were arrested at an apartment a short distance from the spot where she died.

Authorities now say the men were responsible for a 14-month string of shootings that left eight people dead and numerous others wounded.

Hausner is on trial - charged with eight murders and numerous other crimes - in Maricopa County Superior Court in downtown Phoenix, where two witnesses took the stand Monday morning to tell of Blasnek’s dying moments.

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This undated photo, courtesy of MySpace, shows Robin Blasnek of Mesa. Reporter’s note: This story was adapted from yesterday’s blog post, “A death from two angles: the Robin Blasnek murder.”

A death from two angles: the Robin Blasnek murder

December 1st, 2008, 3:07 pm by Nick R. Martin

This morning, two men testified about the death of Robin Blasnek, the young woman who is believed to be the final killing of the Serial Shooters. The 22-year-old was killed by a shotgun blast as she was walking by herself down a darkened Mesa street on July 30, 2006. Both men had striking and heart-wrenching stories about her dying moments. One man knew her. The other didn’t. One man learned from a TV news reporter about Blasnek’s death. The other held her as she bled to death. Here are their stories:

Rudy Reyes expected his friend, Robin, to arrive any minute. It was late at night, and she had called him saying she had just been arguing with her boyfriend and needed someone to talk to. Though it was dark, the young Mesa woman chose to walk the short distance from her house to the house near Gilbert Road and Grandview Street where Reyes was living with his parents.

The two chatted on their cell phones as she walked, but when she was getting close, Reyes said, they decided to hang up during the last stretch. “She was just like, ‘I’m right down the street,’” Reyes said. “She said she was going to call me when she was at the door.”

In the minutes that followed, Reyes heard a loud bang down the street, somewhere in the direction of Gilbert Road, just east of his home. He didn’t know what to think of the sound and sort of shrugged it off, he said. “It just flew right past me.”

Within moments, Robin’s name and number showed up on his caller ID, and he thought she was probably at his front door. He answered the phone, but no one was on the other end. “Then it just hung up,” Reyes said on the witness stand.

Robin never arrived. Eventually, Reyes went to bed and fell asleep, not knowing what happened to his friend. The next morning, a reporter from KNXV-TV (Channel 15) called his house and broke the news to him. Robin was dead.

When Charles Chase heard the bang, he went outside to investigate. He remembers thinking it was either a car backfiring or a gunshot. Either way, he wanted to find out what was happening just north of his house, which sat at the corner of Gilbert and Grandview in Mesa.

“When I stepped outside of the door and looked in that direction, i noticed a girl kneeling on the corner of the street,” Chase testified. “I went over to see what was going on.”

“I was shot,” the young woman told him, crouching on the sidewalk.

She began to fall to the ground, so Chase reached his arm around to steady her and hold her up. “When I pulled my hand away, it was covered in blood,” Chase said on the witness stand. The young woman did not appear to be in pain. She was not crying, but she was not saying much, either. He looked down and saw she was wearing slippers and pajamas. Her cell phone was lying on the ground.

Chase’s wife and children came out of the house to help. One of his sons called 911 as his wife fetched a blanket to pad the young woman against the concrete sidewalk. They laid her down on it while emergency crews were on their way. The woman began to breathe heavily. Then she began to fade.

“She kind of closed her eyes after that,” Chase said. “I don’t remember her opening her eyes again. And she didn’t say anything after that.”

Robin Blasnek appears in this undated photo submitted to the Tribune by one of her friends.

Thursday wrap: Prosecutors near end of segment in Hausner trial

November 21st, 2008, 8:00 am by Nick R. Martin

Prosecutors are nearing the end of the first segment of their case against Dale Hausner, the Mesa man accused of killing eight people and wounding numerous others in 2005 and 2006 in the Serial Shooter case.

In the past month and a half, jurors in a downtown Phoenix courtroom have been faced with dozens of mostly hard-luck victims who authorities say were Hausner’s targets.

Maricopa County prosecutors call it the “scenes” segment of their case. It gave them the opportunity to lay out the facts of every shooting, stabbing and arson they’ve attributed to the 35-year-old defendant.

The testimony was often emotional for jurors to hear, but it seemed to rarely damage Hausner.

So far, more than 100 witnesses have testified in the trial, but just three have been able to link Hausner to any of the incidents.

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Tribune file photo. Dale Hausner speaks at a news conference shortly after his arrest in August 2006. Programming note: The trial is off until Dec. 1.

First segment of ‘Shooter’ trial winding down

November 20th, 2008, 11:27 am by Nick R. Martin

For a month and a half, the testimony in the trial of Serial Shooter suspect Dale Hausner has been a litany of victims, family members and first responders — the police and paramedics called out to the incidents as they happened. Prosecutors call it the “scenes” segment of the trial. It was their chance to document every shooting, stabbing and arson they’ve linked to the Mesa man in the defendant’s chair.

That segment of the trial is expected to end today. Prosecutors are bringing out their final witnesses laying out the 87 crimes attributed to Hausner. More than 100 witnesses have taken the stand so far. Only three of them have linked Hausner to any of the crimes or crime scenes:

  • John Kane, a Gilbert man, testified that Hausner confessed to shooting up an empty car outside of a Tempe bartending school on Dec. 29, 2005. That shooting is believed to have kicked off the bloodiest night of the killing spree.
  • Timothy Davenport testified that Hausner distracted him on May 17, 2006 so that another man could stab him from behind. He identified Hausner “100 percent” as one of the men who participated in the nearly fatal attack.
  • Marianne Thone said that Hausner and his suspected co-conspirator Samuel Dieteman appraoched her outside the scene of her brother’s shooting on May 30, 2006 and told her they were looking for a lost cat.

Some of the final testimony will be in the shooting death of Robin Blasnek, who was killed while walking alone in Mesa on July 30, 2006. Blasnek is believed to be the final victim of the Serial Shooter.

After the Thanksgiving break next week, prosecutors will return with riveting testimony about how investigators began to track a serial killer and eventually came upon Dieteman, who has already confessed to two murders, and Hausner as the suspects. The evidence will include hours of secret recordings that police obtained of the two men reportedly discussing the crimes. The jury may get to hear the recordings by the first week of December.

Photo by pool photographer. Prosecutor Laura Reckart questions a witness while defendant Dale Hausner looks on in the background.

Surveillance camera picked up gunshot sound

November 19th, 2008, 1:34 pm by Nick R. Martin

It was a long, quiet hiss, followed by a boom. Prosecutors this morning played a home surveillance videotape that picked up a startling sound believed to be the shooting of Raul Garcia on July 22, 2006. It was recorded by a security camera set up on a Mesa man’s back porch early that morning.

Garcia survived the shotgun shooting but ended up with more than 50 pellets lodged in his body. According to authorities, he was riding his bicycle on Stapley Drive, just north of Brown Road when he was hit.

Wednesday wrap: 2 place Hausner at attack scenes

November 5th, 2008, 8:51 pm by Nick R. Martin

Two witnesses. Both with different stories. Both with the same conclusion: It was Dale Hausner.

A month into a marathon eight-count murder trial, two people on Wednesday placed Hausner, the Serial Shooter suspect, at the scenes of separate attacks in May 2006.

It was the clearest link yet between the 35-year-old Mesa man and the 14-month string of murders and assaults that stretched across the Valley two years ago.

Hausner looked fidgety and nervous in court as the witnesses told their stories, but that didn’t keep his defense attorneys from aggressively trying to pick apart the testimony.

The first person to identify Hausner in court was Timothy Davenport, who was stabbed nearly to death by two strangers on May 17, 2006, as he was walking to a friend’s house in west Phoenix.

Davenport, 36, said he was crossing through a church parking lot just after midnight near 73rd Avenue and Camelback Road when a car pulled into the lot and the driver stopped to ask him a question.

“Are you OK?” the driver asked, according to Davenport.

Before he could answer, another man came from behind and stabbed him in the back, side and face. Davenport pointed to the scars he has from the attack.

Asked whether either of his attackers was in court on Wednesday, Davenport pointed to Hausner and identified him as the driver.

“He was the one that distracted me while the other guy stabbed me,” Davenport said. “One hundred percent.”

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Programming note: The trial is taking a long weekend, and so is this blog. Live courtroom updates will resume Monday.

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